‘August Flower” “Wl>at is August Flower for ?” As easily answered as asked. It is for Dyspepsia. It is a special rem edy for the Stomach and Liver.— Nothing more than this. We believe August Flower cures Dyspepsia. Wc know it will. We have reasons for knowing it. To-day it has an honored place in every town and country store, possesses one of the largest manufacturing plants in the country, and sells everywhere. The reason is simple. It does one thing, and does it right. It cures dyspepsia® Njdoctoreayalt acta gently on the stomach,liver and kMnoya, and Is a pleasant laxative. This drink It made from herbs, and Is prepared for use as ea*Hy as tea. It la called LANE’S MEDICINE All drociistsMlI ttatlto. and 91 a pacluft. If you cannot get K, sand vonr address for a free sample. Use’s Family Medicine meres Iks bewels each day. Addrers_ f OtUTOH H. WOODWARD, LxEOT, N. Y. W ni1» The Best Waterproof Coat in the wnoini SUCKER TheFISH UUAXD SLICKER Is warranted water proof, and willkeep you dry In the hardest alorm. The POMMEL fiLk'KElt ii a perfect riding coat, and covers theentireaaddle. Beware of Imitations. Don't bay a cout if the ** Fish Brand" la not on It, lllustra ted Catalogue free. A. .1. TOWER, Boston. Mass. 5CteS25«1 IWgfjl SHILOH’S! 525231# Cnres Consumption, Coughs, Cronp, Sore TluoaU Said by ,11 Druncist, on a Guarantee, £«» Ume Sui^ Back orChett Shiloh', Porous riuter mllcivegread aatisfactioa.—a$ cents: Ely’s Cream Balm mu CGJIH CATARRH Al'Pfy Balm Into each nostril. KL»Y,tJROft^JiQ Warren St.,N.V, A e^kftM a 1?e Afrl<,«> Hole Plant, AdinVIm discovered in Congo, West 'Jurefor v«t*.. Africa, is Nature's Sure ■Jr; ,uf turn Guaranteed or No foSLarweTri*!1^* 11B»£S<1.w,l£i s*w York. ?ssaM_»^i5iS!asfSfisr CURE GUARANTEED niFj&iSm*** thaFtiie simple treatmeut which J ami fully da ,0h8 eaouK‘““ WIW. BUTUiR, Box 147, Marshall, Mich. OMAHA BUSINESS HOUSES. FURNITURE, , . '» CARPETS, VeS A*i*VSftS?£“'»• CURTAINS. GROCERIES, l*rueg . . ** uu'| Oiy, Good N tiona, alt NUd*x wEfZTS:'""*™ nn,i vr*ey thing el*o ®rd*r, 4i«SS2 *" tm '• w,th Giro u.< a trtnl *'*W. IMS to 1114 iaplt.1 Are. DS5Ej°”HEtYE--« r*.J.AI.us\, !>-. 309 Rttu.Ra l i ck, t Illustrated ad »i.cd^free. P*'Sl, ‘*V’KI‘ n»- >H» Ho war 1 St I.nrsml 1 « w sili‘L\“£Sio5ui'V'apPi'* I'lp*r "‘,h» ) TOYS ri*1 '* Whelntale TOYS and KAXCY GOODS >11 I tn tka II ■ *TU ...Mu i. _ _ ....... m.iK iwi.i *V”ii rAACI lilNiun in ihe UATB U1$Y B. T. CO.. 1119 UU. SaiwI fi.n I > _.... , — u.no UAI D. rain uu. Send for l at&logue. A*S5m*uI3,Ml ,u,d HO rooms O. ^'ni-htd Klevat.r. Fire hue • pen. l»y. XI». ritt k schiank. Prup’tST WINE, LIQUOR db ciQAR OO. 1H3 tiiinalm ** W|"*B» Uqttar* an.i i-.gara, ,iam **«»•*» uwaha. Send for Price LiaV RKSf ?EP*IR W0»XS * eretit stoves. H|.. On Ai “*• U.I Uccontod TinK.r. PY FfiTSSES! ®*‘-E*IES»ni1 OiIL tVIRK. All to Htoto- • tn*fur« hijttor. M »»>— ■.ll-l‘.B *t Htoi^ . ut. IU» A UUAIX o.. ISIAU Hurl tt. K M. RlirOY. gcmNr.FW optician 1,1 tolicueilj til ' "*“• ““ A®fhTi 4 J^a-r-Ufr "* New IMtonl An ,J»sliel«rW»tii^rB5„Poti “n .‘«d» K* w MW» 9*f*n> Aiwots t-uoxui Co oinalm I ctdar Doat^Ititoi*?!1, whlU ^ PO*U. iphloak A —. P^>*> Ume,etc. c. R. Lm. ftkADongiae SCHTH OMAHA HOUSES. Vxjyu M;rii|. R - - — —' - joii» u. u_ * 0D So. Oiuniia, KeH. c ct lur itdie 1 upon «mpd*«i LIVE STO .L0MMI.SI. ■ Jull.'i D. l-Ali, —-— - utVtoAll [t ''W lliv,I.UeFr***1 W- w»>. fc‘M ?euhW i lS'!*»sass«,*-»£.*.s. WXwkVwiMlMlo"' r,,^L*, lik£ wS?‘w v i Rt^ Conunlerdnn <■•«>». iSwSLtS * Ynra - «®“th ou nhe and re^yoodencc and jour traue MMicd.ed UWflEKCE. sWEEkEY ft HOfiH.« 1<*uasy( South Omaha, Matomaka A SOUTH WIND. A rmnpinp wind blew from the south. And woke the dreaming wood, it kissed the rose's crimson mouth; hum pled the 1 Hippy's hood. It crisped the waters of the brook: Loosed pi- e-scents on the air; And round Jier psllid temples shook i J *ie dead girl’s silken hair. —James B. Kenyon, in New England Mag* HESTER’S ROMANCE. » HE spring was very sweet that year, the or chard blos soms were / heavy and rica on tin* ireali, warm air, and the Barnards’ brown farm-house, with its mossy roof, fitted perfectly into the landscape of the gently undulating prairie land, but Joshua ■ Barnard never noticed it.;, thirty years’ com panionship with his wife, Jane, had thoroughly eradicated the esthetic part of his nature. She was a woman whose face gave one the impression that it had been rudely carved out with a sharp knife and not polished down; she accentuated this by dragging her hair back into a tight knot at tlie wrong angle of her head. Mrs. Bar nard was noted in the country round about for her sharp voice, good but ter, and obstinacy. How site was ever induced by her enduring hnsband to let him send their only daughter. Hester, away to school had been the marvel of the gossips for months. Whatever topic was introduced it always branched off on to the Barnards. Pity for the head of the family, backbiting for the wife, and covert, envious remarks for Hester were alluring snares of wicked ness that could not be resisted. Hester had come back that spring for good, her collego days were finished and she was trying to settle down again in the old life that seemed a dream. _ Four years of city life, with the re fining influences she had met, had worked a marvelous change in the brown-eyed, quiet girl. She thought at first her father and mother had changed, and was puzzled, but when the real truth broke upon her she felt sud denly alienated, as though she were a stranger. They were where she had left them, while she moved a notch higher; it made iier more tenderly kind towards her father, whom she loved; more charitable towards her mother, who was at once proud of her and dissatisfied and on account of this sometimes trying. It hurt Hester to hear her mother boast to a neighbor of her daughter’s accom plishments; it filled her with chagrin to be pushed forward at the li tie gatherings, whose atmosphere had be become distasteful, and to see the en vious sneers on the faces of her former friends. At first when she came back she had tried to meet them on the old footing, but she could not become interested in their gossip and beaux and they could not comprehend her. So, little by little, she fell back upon herself for companionship, m ch to the an or of Mrs. Barnard, who was ambitious for Hester to shine in the co-intry side; her ambition went no higher. “You are ungrateful, Hester,” she said sharply one evening, as she cleared the supper ta'de. “Look at the money spent on your schooling, and now you won’t go any where, but stick at home like a nobody.” Hester did not reply—she had learned better—and stood looking out of the window in a hopeless sort of a way. She had earnestly tried to do her apparent duty, but life seemed very hard of late, cut off from con genial pursuits and friends. Yes, it was the friends, she thought, with a 11(1811. "And then refusing to go to the sociable to-morrow night witli Nat Parkins,” her mother went on in her rasping voice, “when every one will be there, and he is the richest farmer in this region, and all the girls would jive their eyes to-:—” “Motherl” Hester broke in desper ately at last. “I do all in my power to please you, but I will not go w tli Mr. Parkins—I detest him!” and she fled to her room, wliereshe threw her self sobbing upon her little bed. She felt so hopeless, so homesick lor—well, for what? And in her abandonment of grid she repeated a name to herself ;is if it contorted her. She had not known when she left tue city how she loved Herbert Strong, who parted from her at the depot with that re pro.ichru look in his eyes. What caprice had moved her to tell liim no? At that moment she felt as ■ thom>h she would give the world to pour out her sorrow and penitence to lim, but lie was lost to her—gone to 1 some far western town. So she lay and sobbed herself sick. It was the natural result of her self omrolled trouble; she hod not so completely owned to herself before I lowmuch she regretted the past. When she rose in the morning she taw such a white little face and swol eu eyes in the glass that s e dreaded to go down Btairs. A sort of apathy iad sei/.ed upon her, however, and she ! pii tly slipped into her place at the 1 table with hopes lliat her mother 1 would not notice her especi lly. Hut 1 :he sliarp eyes of that busy woman j took her daughter in quickly. She in- 1 tended to w.itdi her more closely 1 lereatter; Isr dislike for Nat Parkins ' must be overcome. “Hester," she cried in surprise, '•what have you been doing to your- ! (eh?“ 1 “Nothing," Hester said, wearily, ' ’racing herself for the attack Mrs. 1 Barnard, after a moment's look, t,et I down the coffee-pot and opened her ] lips, but suddenly, to everybody’s j surprise. Mr. Barnard wlio usually I kept a discreet silence duringhia wife’s tirades, laid his toil-worn hand on his daughter's shoulder. j “Now, .lane!”—her husband spoke ! with the authoritative tone he rarely I used save when his daughter needed ! defense—“I want you to drop this nonsense about marrying Hester off ! to Nat Parkins. He is not her kind i at all.” In his blind way Joshua j Barnard felt the difference between ' his gentle daughter and the bluff, rough young farmer. “After she went up stairs last night,” he went on, “I passed under her window, and the child was crying fit to break her heart, and look at her pale face this morning. Can’t you see “Yes, I see it," his wife said,crossly. It always roused her temper to be op posed unexpectedly by her husband, for she usually had to submit. “I see it, and it’s all nonsense! Some good for-notbin’ city fellow, I’ll warrant"’ with which shot she left the table and began rattling the dishes in a way to prevent further conversation. Joshua Barnard slowly left the house for the field, ft was a new idea that his wife had suggested, yet Hes ter had never said anything to him about it, and there were few things she did not confide in him. He i- ——II n. 1_1_ _ _ mg, till the terrible heat drove all the workers to the welcome shade of the trees along the fence by the roadside. The dust lay thick and dry on the ground, the insects shrilled monoton ously—nothing stirred. A cloud of duet came down the road and Joshua llarnard and his men watched it cur iously. Who was foolish enough to drive horses so fast under such ablaz ing sun? It did not take much to check the exhausted span of bays, who stood panting and dust-begrimmed, and they turned to the light buckboard. A man lay there, fallen under the seat, with his face a dark red and his clothes dust-covered. “Drunk!” was the disgusted cry, but Joshua Barnard, who looked more closely, said, "A sunstroke. Take him to the house carefully,” and fol lowed, wiping his heated brow. He felt charitable now towards all stran gers. Was it not a stranger that Hester perhaps loved? There was confusion in the brown farmhouse immediately, for Jane Barnard was in her elements when she had a sick person on tier hands, anil she unceremoniously left Hester with the housework below while she took possession of the sick room. She was attracted by the unconscious man, with his handsome face and refined appearance. “How is he?” Hester asked when her mother fina'ly descended. “He’ll be all right after my nurs ing,” that worthy personage remark ed, and forthwith launched into a glowing description of her patient. Hester’s curiosity was aroused; so like irom her mother’s descripti in, yet-. A wild thought flashed through her head, and she stole up stairs with a beating heart and paus ed on the threshold. She felt dizzy and closed her eyes. “It could not he," she kept saying, “he is miles away from here.” Vet when she finally did look at the unconscious face of the man before her a look of passionate joy came into her eyes. “Thank heaven, Herbert, darling!” she cried, and as if the spell were broken he looked at her. A smile of recogntiou came to his lips and with a murmured endearment hetriod to draw her to him. “I have found him, mother!” her daughter said, with a smile through her tears, and as though this explain ed it all she turned to her father's ooen arms. When Herbert Strong recovered and went away with his young bride even Jane Barnard had become reconciled to her new son-in-law, and never again in her life did she mention Nat Parkins’ name. She accepted her do teat. origin ot mninemancai signs. ( The sign of addition is derived from the initial letter of the word “plus.” In making the capital lett r it was ' made more and more carelessly un til the top part of the “p” was finally placed near the center, hence the plus : sign, as you know it, was gradually reached. , The sign of subtraction was lerived from the word “minus.” The word was first contracted in m, ' n, s, with a horizontal line above to ndicate that some of the letters had been left cut. At last the letters were smitted altogether, leaving only the short line. i The multiplication sign was obtained ‘ >y changing the plus sign into the letter X. This was dono because multipli action is but a shorter form of addi tion. ' Division was formerly indicated by * placing the dividend above a horizon- ‘ :al line and the divisor helow. In * order to save space in printing, the lividend was placed to the left and 1 the divisor to the right. After years >f “evolution,” the twod's were omit- ] ted altogether, and simple dots set in i he place ol each. As with the others, ■ the radicul sign was derived from the ’ nitial letter of the word “radix." The sign of equality was first used « n the year 1667 by a sharp mathe uatician, who substituted it to avoid . requently repeating the words “equal 1 o. ”—Philadelphia Press. t Lifting the Hat. > The custom of lifting the hat had ita irigin during the age of chivalry, when t was customary for knights never o appear in public except in full ar nor. It became a custom, however, or a knight, upon entering an aaeem ily of friends, to remove his helmet, lignifying “1 am safe in the pretence >f friends.” ~ The ago of chivalry passed away vith the fifteenth century, but among he many nets of courtesy which can >e traced hack to its influence none is nore dire t in its origin than that of ifiing the hat to uckuowied||e the avvence of a fi iend. foi*. Hats aisd Hat Cateliluit. Said h prominent rat catcher of Philadelphia: "The theory Vnat rills nnu mice cun be whistled out of their biding places by certain individuals who are said to ply their trade in the old country. I do not believe it. Uther means are used and the whistling the ory is advanced to cover up the true methods. To eradicate this class of vermin require* much brain work. There are several breeds of rats and mice ns distinctly dilTerent in their habits nnu peculiarities as the racesof men. Most of the smaller animals are afraid of Ore. and a new process isnow being used successfully in cellars and houses that aro overrun with rats to stampedo them by means of this pro cess. When a rut gets old he becomes stout as an old alderman and moves about very slowly. 1 have seen them about the wharves as large as small cats, and it is singular how, under the cover of night, they will desert a leak ing ship or a. dangerous coal mine. Dairymen, atovkmen, livery-stable men ami hoitecr men unite in sving licit no such horse an i ratlin liniment as .Salva Ion Oil has ever been pm m,ou the market. It Should tie kept at every stable and stock yard in the land. :::< rt*. There are s Oilt 10 I law,‘era In tue oltv of Denver, or an uv* r ge of one to evcrv'lloO peojile. It Is too plain to need s demonstration by chart or u.agratn that Dr. Bull's though Sviup is what *i e people need everywhere, for cure of bronchial and tieeloral troubles, li is s sure core. Protect Our Home*. 1 wish to protest against the flood of immigrants that are now coming to our shores. We do not want any more of the ciass who have been comings but I wouid not exuir.de those who will abide by our laws. 1 believe that for the good of our country all immi grants should be here 21 years before having the.right to vote. \They should also be thoroughly versed and educated in our laws ana customs so they could vote intelligently and not be led to the polls. Our boys have to bo *21 years old before they can vote. Why not have the foreigner hero the same length of time? Is bn belter than our boys? I would also have a property qualification so they would have an interest in our government. -Andrew M. Lagrange, Albany Co., N. Y. IN OLDEN TIMES People overlooked the importance of permanently beneiicial effects and were satis tied with transient action, but now I that it is generally known that Syrup : of Figs will permanently cure habitual I constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act fora time, but finally injure the system. 'ound Adv ct* lor Yolinss U rller*. t If a man believes that he has some talent for writing, it is indeed strange that he can allow himself to be di rected by a master or by tho rule of any school, no matter how great the master may bo or how skilfully devised the rule may seem, writes Pierre I.oti in tho October Frum. In the first place, is it possible for a writer, no matter how much he may wish to be lieve it, to belong to any particular school? No. and very fortunately, it seems to me a writer should do what he wishes to do. ar.d do it in bis own way, obeying oniy the aii-powerful im pulse that he tins felt rising from the tenths of bis nature, without accept ing any other judge than the wholly spontaneous impression his own work jives him. What an author has writ ten in this way, whether it be memoir, phantasy, romance, drama, poem or iny other name you please, whether it :an or canuot be put into school cata ogue, whether it have or have not success with the mob — all this is im naterial; for ail true lovers of artistic »ork will surely recognize it if they ind in it the breath of life, without which nothing can exist for him. •o*iP* ®L\rP80N, Marquess, W. Ya., sars: .Hull's Catarrh Cure cured me of a very bad of catarrh.” Druggist* sell It, 76c. The ruin- of :t city, believed to he older ban tiie Aztecs, have been found ;u east* •n\ Oregon. FITS-AU fit* Mopped fro.- bp DU. KLIMTS SUIT UUtAK UisrniSlCR. No Qt otter Dim dap'* use. Ifor* -clou* cure*. Treatise sad *2 00 trial bottle tree to Fit saea. send to Dr. Kline,1131 Arak8l.,l’hilad«lphia,ra. * hrysantheiuums. rtrveii as sslad, itt avor tc article tn .net among ihc Japanese. To be Plninp. Bony and Ptromc %Use Jons <1. itAKKK A t o.’s I'nre Norwegian od IJvertMI. lneUtuu linker’s. Sold by druitgiata. Til I area of t e great i-aiiara desert is qua- to tba of the Doited Plates. A big mm groan wit when he gets sick ecause there is more < f him to suiter. (lave You inf HIM ’ X)iL K. Soupi-MtS. St. i'atil. Minn , will uaii a trial park-age of rebiffuian’s Asthma nit- pure to any sulTeier. Hives instant el ief in worst cases, ami cures where otii rs fail. Name tnir paper anti scn-i address. («• ay horses the tne ioi go-t lived, und Osh - c» m - . e.vt ;n (irdpr. Kelcuasi’s I’ll.i. enjot the' iarg st s le fa y i ro ri-mry no .cine u me world, ittue only in s?t Helens, Kn-gL.ud. Acco di-.g to the Mohuuimc.an faiili" here are seven - e 1-. llammonu'a CAl.lj.MET Lard, Hams and a on. All llrst-chos grocers aim marnet i leir 0audi t Inis in and. .Made troll! i rune lei rusk* hogs. Try it. The (1. 11. Ham ion H to., bomb Omaha, Neb. There a:e 11,000 t-lephoges in l.onolulu a a pop .lalion bl 23, COL ire bon 4.otitic ast or smith during, the waiter, if so Tub 1'abash desires to call y> nr attention as i ha tour st one to tio Ida and all the ! r.atar resorts of tne soul.i. I Kotti o-;*lp tickets will he placed c n sale I lout^Nuv. ist. g ol returning ,nul June Ut)ttou*ritocrn south »nu bountkAsT. UU.T U bo rs to t. I.ottls. ST •* •* IIm b ring*. 3S ** •* New i irieauA •* Atlant-. 63 “ *' Jacks-.uvLie. 1.33 1 ’* 'lamp*. Wlih autr a do ml lug fa-t time to all yoina a.» and uoa h The o .iy Her .n.iing U». llmatr Cb»ir Cars in tit ],- ul«, Decatur iaa-llle. La ar,-:te, - o. auspor:. Ft’ **»» « T- cio and D-tro . Pullman uCeti beeping Cos on all tra na. For ickau ar fur li -r in o ui-itlon i iegard to potea *4 ai tne Wum-h ■ hie , liodVar aca tt. or wr.te G. N. O avton. Aorta «es tern Vats Ageu Omaha, Neb. Fifty-e*(* tecta!* ore now k- o tit to ctiH S‘.-d "oil ' ! - , ■ ' " Tli« Indtnn i ncum'M-r, The Indian encumber i* a sort of lily, which grows in greut nbundunco in almost every part of the country, anti is said to be an excellent remedy for dropsy. The*best part of the cu cumber is the root which grows to the size of two inches in length and one inch in thickness, and was formerly I eaten raw by the Indiana just as wo j eat cucumbers. Its medicinal virtues | were discovered by an old woman in | Pennsylvania, and afterward admitted i by the doctora which is not the only ! case of the efficacy of an old woman’s remedy being acknowledged by the modical profession. A Canal lt*«fpen*4. Health Is largely dependent upon a regular habit of hotly. The bowels act as nil Import ant canal for the carrying of waste matter of the system. They, together with the kidneys and pores, are outlets for de bris whose presence is fatal to the body’s well being. Hostettor’s Stomach Hitters is no vio lent purgative, but a gentle laxative admir ably adapted to the wauls of the constipated. It never gripes or wrenches the Intestines as nil drastrlc cathartics do, but produces an no lion ukln to that of an effort of nature. Bill I ousness. Indigestion, with tholr associate manifestation, costive ness, are speedily and completely remedied by this line corrective, which also conquers inaluriu, sick headache, kidney and rheumatic trouble, and checks premature decay. M uteriiig «nil FertllIxin". Plants are often killed by over watering. but do not iet your plants dry up. All plants should have a water-tight saucer. Water the plants by putting the water on top of the pot rather than in the saucer. What the plnnts do not want wiil run through into the saucer. After an hour or so pour oil the surplus water and do not water again until the top of the earth begins to look dry. When the pot has become filled with roots manure water may be used, which will not only sus tain the plant for a long time but in crease its vitality very much. Vari ous manures may be used ulso; dry hon manure at the rate of a teaspoonful to one quart of water or the same of guano to one gallon, or horse manure, leached and applied rather weak, j Cow manure makes as rich a fertilizer as anything and can be used to good advantage 'in the summer. i» « ouaiinipiion. Kemps Balsam will stop the cough at cnce. Go to your druugUt to-dav and got a sample buttle free, f.aige tollies6(1 cents and (1.00. They cail a bicycle “the dev l’s chnrljt" in Turkey and the sultan forbids its use. ... ** lleuami’s Sinaia Porn S«l*r.-’ warrmilert to rnre, or money refunded. Ask your druggist for it. Price IS cents. Ten day* | er annum la the attcragc amount of sichncss In 1 uman life. i a uvii fi ts u i\n:n. to repreaant ua in every town In Nebraska, Western Iowa, i-outli Dakota and Northern Kansas. AVe eairv the Largest Stocks and greatest variety of goods west of Chicago. I We make the lowest prices and make a - apec alty of Alliance and other Farmers' I trade. W e carry complete llnca In all kinds of merchandise. Including Musical Instru ments. Liberal Inducements offered to a live roan In each town. Hayden Bites.. Dhy Goods and Carpets, Omaha, Neb. The tunflosver tears 4,000 seeds, the po; py 02,000 and the tobacco phint 70,320. A Drunkard, Morphine or Opium eater or Tobacco chewers, can tesafelv, speedily and permanently cured l.y taking the Knsor Cures. Write lor test inonlula and prices on territory to Ensor Remedy Co., 413 N. 24 h"ht., S'utu Omaha, Nebr. In Genesee countv, New York, there are 1S5 families who,have never seen a Bible. If any yo mg man want* to find nut what the w.ld waves are sail. g let him to tosea. Mrs. E. J. Rowell, Medford, Maas., says her mother baa been cured of Scrofula by the naa of four bottles of KKKB after having bad much other treat- KSaflSw ment, and being reduced to quite a low condition of health, as it waa thought she could not live. peared all ayearl had of hla Cured my little hoy ^ of heredi tary scrofulawhlcbap face. For given up all hope »» *•*» recovery, when finally I was WJh A few bo ^ ttles cured him, and no symptoms of the disease remain. Mbs. T. L. Mathers, Mathervllle. Miss. bull took tra Bloat au.t Skin Disenses mailed free. Swift specific Co.. Atlanta, Ca. Mfc. OjuIu. St.« Tlrnt, Crcs». Musa. wJugpbv Osaji. 3:oa;bttli ul t rim a e nail cn nteRmdub Lituun. til t nn nbtls it msn »:»JM. On it a:«. TotiUm tht ratal •ftotikttui'jfthi Sritltn Etit t>eubni>s% •ton. lifgi kottlci 03 ttaSM ul 11 CO. 1‘ WM. SNYSBR, ■AXCf ACTCREA Fine. High Grade Carriages, Baggies, Phaetons and Road Wagons 14 th and Harney SteOmaha, Aebraekm, ' Reference: Anj bu».ncu man in Omaha. wIFF SAYs SHi CANNOT SIC huw nirc tqudoitfobtnimonIt. flABuvialU.OOI^nnd Oibn) Urn *1 * IU*hU*i rMhtt v«rtla| . wUtbte. *^!y Map 1*4 «• llfht Hi k««vy Mrt, • (aiWiplMlMlftlMlllWhirmrftttMltMM FRIK. IlM BMllM I • (MMMlMwi tW » fnn. h) b* MV M*n, ul dmWr ul mil ■r-M. km* a* ml r.\TAi<*«»ra nmimm. '<>**•««*, nn a a. CHICAGO Uu f|ENSION«US£S?£% war, Pa4Ju annot gHVM. ItssMi Hoots nod flmtw nature's wwwHv —h i» wiirlMM. The woj 4 M* vf*. three ve_ Ueo Nw U, dei < Cii»«S M0 MM Ootlrtarriii.la PATENTS ffssyii "TSTiJTaara I H I kill I W laiaaL Write for lavauer'iUeMa A&llllBfl*fnrPhln« Habit Ci_ 0rlUM,DN^T^KENU'"',1,,r' InM !o«X ASTHMA CURED^STtSJSPSt COLLINS BKOK. MKDICIMC Co , SL Court. Mu. ‘iSS'Sa.'iii? 1 Thompsoa’s Eye Water. PISO'S CUR £ TOP Coaaamptlvae and people Who have vest Innas or Aath* at. should use rieo »Curv for Consumption. It tin* cured thonaaada. Uhas not tajnr e l mie. (tie tot bud lotmo. it u» the has: cough sy-up. ~ Id ever* where. 2.*c. nffluUa • \5‘ V W. hi. U. Omaha - 64 ?— 16